Difference between revisions of "Love Game Engine"

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(Making a Game)
(Making a Game)
Line 8: Line 8:
 
To make a minimal game:
 
To make a minimal game:
  
#create a folder anywhere
+
#Create a folder for your game
#open up your favorite text editor. Sublime Text is a pretty good one for all operating systems, and it has Lua support built in.  
+
#Open up your favorite text editor. Sublime Text is a pretty good one for all operating systems, and it has Lua support built in.  
 
#Create a new file in the folder you just created, and name it main.lua.  
 
#Create a new file in the folder you just created, and name it main.lua.  
#Put the following code in the file, and save it:
+
#Put the following code in the 'main.lua' file, and save it:
 +
 
 
<syntaxhighlight lang=lua>
 
<syntaxhighlight lang=lua>
 
function love.load()
 
function love.load()

Revision as of 09:04, 3 June 2019

Download

Go to the main site for the Love engine:

love2d.org

Getting Started

Making a Game

To make a minimal game:

  1. Create a folder for your game
  2. Open up your favorite text editor. Sublime Text is a pretty good one for all operating systems, and it has Lua support built in.
  3. Create a new file in the folder you just created, and name it main.lua.
  4. Put the following code in the 'main.lua' file, and save it:
function love.load()
    -- use to set up your game
end

function love.draw()
    love.graphics.print("Hello World", 400, 300)
end

Running Games

Within Windows software such as ZeroBrane Studio, Sublime Text 2, Notepad++, and SciTE allow you to launch the game from within their code editors.

Otherwise, the easiest way to run the game is to drag the folder onto either love.exe or a shortcut to love.exe. Remember to drag the folder containing main.lua, and not main.lua itself.

You can create a shortcut to do this; simply make a shortcut to love.exe, right-click on it and select 'Send to Destop' to create a shortcut:

Love shortcut.gif

On Windows, there is a special command-line option which will attach a console to the window, allowing you to see the result of print calls. So right click your shortcut, choose 'properties', and edit the target to include '--console' eg:

"C:\Program Files\LOVE\love.exe" --console

Tutorials

Here is the link for the tutorial on the Love wiki site:

Love tutorials